a a WEDNESDAY, JUNE 8th, 1932 All BUNDLES Must Be | | Left at the sl / DOOR... STRANGE ruling! Yet a ruling that is ad- hered to strictly by every church. The bundles in question are WORRY, CARE. They must be left at the door when you en- ter your Church. And when you come out again, the bundles will be gone! No mat- ter how heavy your burdens, no matter how long or far you have carried them, they will be lifted from you as you enter. Remember that! When things are dark- est, and you are weary, and the hill ahead looks too steep, and you feel that you can- not take another step, remember your Church. Leave Worry and P| Care at Home 1 Your Church offers you strength, rest, ol courage. Let your Church help you. Come i Let you Church help you. Come often. Come in sorrow, but come, too, in joy. For though the Church can make your sorrow less bitter it can also make your joy more sweet. Come to Church next Sunday and leave WORRY and CARE at the door. COME TO CHURCH SUNDAY i SAINT MARY’S CHAPEL DONEGAL PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH CHURCH OF THE BRETHREN KRAYBILL'S MENNONITE CHURCH PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH MT. JOY MENNONITE CHURCH ST. LUKE'S EPISCOPAL CHURCH CHURCH OF GOD Wa TRINITY LUTHERAN CHURCH x FLORIN UNITED BRETHREN CHURCH METHODIST EPISCOPAL CHURCH TRINITY EVANGELICAL CONGREGA- i TIONAL CHURCH ST. MARK’S U. B. CHURCH er | Stibgen, Marietta, 3rd. THE MOUNT JOY BULLETIN, MOUNT JOY, LANCASTEk CO., PA. Flower Show | At Bainbridge | (From page 1) new classes of exhibits, The entire arrangement was impressive in that its simplicity provided added beauty Bird houses, erected by boys were attrac- tively arranged, An old draw-well, near the center of | the exhibit, including the “old oaken bucket” attracted considerable atten- tion as did the Old Cabin, in which Mrs. Mary Kuhn, of Elizabethtown, portrayed the grandmother character in appropriate Colonial costume, A tea room, near the mill, was decorated in red, white and blue. The show will be continued this Sat- urday and it is expected that 1,000 people will be present. The exhibits were judged by Mrs. John Fox, wife of Judge John Fox, of the Dauphin county courts, and Mrs Carl Davis, also of Harrisburg. Both ' women are officials of the Harrisburg | Garden Club, | PRIZE WINNERS The following are the prize winners: | Class I—Quality of Bloom and Fol- iage and Best Stems. | Pink California Poppy, Mae Brinser, | Falmouth, 1st; Yellow California Pop- | py, Mrs, Walter Hawthorne, Bain- | bridge, 2nd. | Coral Belle, Emerson Rohrer, Man- | heim, 1st; Mrs. S. B. Frey, Marietta, | 2nd; Mrs. Paris Engle, Bainbridge, 3rd. | Centurea-Cornflower, Emerson Roh- | rer, 1st; Mae Brinser, 2nd; Mabel Heisey, 3rd. | Daouricum (Lily), Emerson Rohrer, i 1st. Hemeriollis (Lemon Lily), Mrs. Paris ! Engle, Bainbridge, 1st Jacobean Lily, Mrs. | Rheems, 1st. Gaillardia, Amanda Ebersole, Bain- bridge, 1st; Mrs. Vernon Hickson, | Bainbridge, 2nd; Mrs. Jacob Zook, Mt. Susan Heisey, , Emerson Rohrer, 1st. ( Snapdragons, Mabel Heisey, Eliza- | bethtown, R. D., 1st; Mrs. Reuben | Becker, Elizabethtown, 2nd; Mrs. Har- rison Keller, Elizabethtown, 3rd. Digitalis, Mrs, Milton Ball, Eliza- bethtcwn, 1st; Mrs. D. P. Umberger, Bainbridge, 2nd; Miss Anna Keller, Elizabethtown, 3rd. Pansies, Emerson Rohrer, Manheim, 1st rs. P. K. Landis, Mt. Joy, 2nd. Sweet Peas, Billmeyer, 1st; Emerson Rohrer, 2nd. Armeria, Emerson Rohrer, 1st. | Salvia, Emerson Rohrer, 1st; Mrs. | Paris Engle, 2nd. Shirley Poppies, Mrs, Paris Engle, 1st; Mabel Heisey, 2nd; Kathleen Bar- bour, Bainbridge, 3rd. Gypsophilia, Emerson Mrs, Paris Engle, 2nd. Valeriana, Mrs, Paris Rohrer, 1st; Engle, 1st; Mrs. D. P. Umberger, 2nd; Emerson | Rohrer, 3rd. Columbine, Emma Herchelroth, | York, 1st; Emerson Rohrer, 2nd. Sweet Williams, Mrs. Jacob Zook, Mount Joy, 1st; Emerson Rohrer, 2nd; Mrs. Odessa Hickson, 3rd. Dianthu, Mabel Heisey, 1st; Emer- son Rohrer, 2nd. Dianthus (Maiden Pinn), Mrs. Paris Engle, 1st; Emerson Rohrer, 2nd. Oriental Poppies, Red, Mrs. Walter Engle, 1st; Emerson Rohrer, 2nd; Miss Emma Herchelroth, 3rd; pink, Mrs. B: F. Hoffman, 1st; Mrs. Walter Engle, 2nd; white, Emerson Rohrer, 1st. Peonies, Double White, Miss Anna Keller, 1st; Mr. Frank Eshleman, Eliz- abethtown, 2nd; Miss Amanda Eber- sole, 3rd; Double Pink, Mrs. Walter Engle, 1st; Miss Anna Keller, 2nd; Dark Red, Double, Mrs. B. F. Hoff- man, lst. Single Peony, Mrs. Walter 1st; Mrs. Ben Herchelroth. Delphinium, Emerson Rohrer, 1st. Pyrethum Daisy, Miss Amanda Ebersole, 1st; Emerson Rohrer, 2nd; Mrs, Phares Landis, 3r3d3. Cynoglossum, Mrs. Paris Engle, 1st. Anchusa, Emerson Rohrer, 2nd. Lupines, Emerson Rohrer, 1st. Dictamnus, Emerson Rohrer, 1st. Baptisia, Emerson Rohrer, 1st. Linaria, Emerson Rohrer, 1st. Geumi, Emerson Rohrer, 1st. Dicentra, Emerson Rohrer, 1st. German Iris, S, B. Mason, 1st; Mrs. B. F. Hoffman, 2nd; Mrs. H. F. Schell, 3rd. Spanish Iris, Emerson Rohrer, 1st. Dutch Iris, Mrs, Walter Engle, 2nd. Siberian Iris, Mrs. Walter Engle, 1st; Emerson Rohrer, 2nd. Section B Engle, Roses: Class I: Best Single Bloom: Mary Stibgen, Marietta, 1st; Ruth C. Kray- bill, Elizabethtown, 2nd; Mabel Heisey, Elizabethtown, 3rd; S. B. Mason, hon- orable mention. Class II, Hybrid Tea, Best Container of 6, at least, 3 varieties, Mrs. Ruth C. Kraybill, 1st; Pauline M. Garber, 2nd; Mabel Heisey, 3rd. Class III, Hybrid Perpetual, Best container, of 6 at least 3 varieties; Ma- bel Heisey, 1st. Class IV, Climbing Roses, best con- tainer, 6 sprays: Emerson Rohrer, 1st; William Greer, Columbia, 2nd; Mary Class V, Best Container arrange- ment Mary Stibgen, Marietta, 1st; Mrs. Paris Engle, Bainbridge, 2nd; Ruth C. Kraybill, Elizabethtown, 3rd. Section VI, Best Basket arrange- ment, Mrs. Clarence Greider, Mt. Joy, 1st; Ruth C. Kraybill, 2nd; Mary Stibgen, 3rd; honorable mention, Mrs. (Large) Mixed Fowers, Mabel Heisey, 1st; Emerson Rohrer, 2nd; Mrs.; Ben Herchelroth, 3rd., Large Basket Peonies, Anna Keller, 1 | | i { 1st; Joe Snavely, { ment, Mrs. Robert Forney, 1st; Emer- ‘ son Rohrer, 2nd; Mrs. P. H. Landis, Hershey, 2nd; Dr. Vere Treichler, Elizabethtown, 3rd. (b) Small Mixed Basket arrange- Mrs. A. J. Seachrist, | Waynesburg. } { Rheems, 1st. Cheap Seeds Are Nothing But Weeds (From page one) sales agency through a farmer or grain elevator in rural districts, the investigations of the Federal auth- orities and State Agricultural agen- cies show. With the agency estab- lished, the farmer or grain elevator ells directly or takes orders for the seed and the truck owner tends to avoid legal responsibility and has to spend only alittle time in the State. By the time the seed buyer test: the seed, the truck seed sales- man is or is in another state gone, toined morning glory seed at the rate of 10,560 seeds to the bushel. ture officials are urging that farm- ers and seed dealers report the ac- tivities of peddlers of illegal seeds at once so that the responsible par- ties can be apprehended and prose- cuted. wml A eee COUNTY MERCANTILE County Treasurer I. Scott Smith, of | Bainbridge, has warned county mer- chants in arrears in their mercantile license payment that all accounts not paid by July 1, will be turned over to an alderman for collection. The taxes | became due May 1, and must be set- tled by July 1. Only 2900 out of a total 5700 accounts have been settled to date, Mr. Smith pointed out. This is about 200 behind the same period in 1931. Robert Car- ter, Ephrata, Mercantile appraiser, and Joseph Lutz, Columbia, assistant, have completed the annual | visited. resentatives of the state will make a , survey in Lancaster this year, in or- | der to enforce the payment of these taxes. In previous years, Mr. Smith | said, a number of operators did not | pay. Mt. Morris—Mt. Morris Telephone Co. sold to South Penn Telephone Co., West Chester—Work on new court- house annex practically completed. Lewistown—Diana Candy Shoppe interior redecorated. Burnham—First National Bank of Burnham redecorated. Schuylkill Haven — Ebinger Iron Works, recently located in Port Car- bon, to go into production here shortly. Class 2, Arrangement in Containers, (a) pottery; Peonies: Mrs, H. F. Shell, Lancaster, 1st; Mrs. Roy Good, Bainbridge, 2nd; Mrs. B. F. Hoffman, 3rd. Snapdragons, Mabel Mrs, Jacob Zook, 2nd. Shirely Poppies: Mrs. Sue Heisey, Heisey, 1st; Corn flowers: L. Mae Brinser, 1st; Mrs. Jacob Zook, 2nd; Mrs. Ben Her- chelroth, 3rd. Mixed flowers: Mrs, Ruth C. Kray- bill, 1st; Elizabeth Eby, Mt. Joy, 2nd; Mrs. H. F. Schell, 3r3d. Iris, Mrs. Jacob Zook, 1st; Mrs. Ben Herchelroth, 2nd. Monotone Arrangement, Mrs. Walter Engle, 1st; Mrs. Susan Heisey, 2nd. Section C; Class 2. Arrangement in Metal Containers, Mrs. Simon Heisey, Elizabethtown, 1st, Mrs. B. F. Hoffman, 2nd; Emerson Rohrer, 3rd. Section C; Class 3. Floral Arrangement in Pair of Vases, Joyce Hawthorne, Bainbridge, Ist, Ruth Kraybill, 2nd; Mrs. Samuel Frey, 3rd. Section C; Class 4; For children 14 years and under. Arrangement of owers in Miniature Pitcher; Nancy Engle, Elizabethtown, 1st; Robert Ear- hart, Elizabethtown, 2nd; Mildred Eby, Mount Joy, 3rd; Jane Kehl, 4th; John Landis, Mount Joy, 5th; Thelma Hick- son, Bainbridge, 6th. SECTION D Class I Quality of Bloom, Foliage and arrangement. Best Collection: Pansies, Emerson Rohrer, 1st. Iris, S. B. Mason, 1st; Mrs, Walter Engle, 2nd; Emerson Rohrer, 3rd. Peonies, Mrs. Ben Heichelroth, 1st; Dr. Vere Treichler, 2nd. SECTION E Class I. Luncheon tables: Bridge luncheon, Mrs, E. L. Corn- man, Marietta, 1st; Mrs, Frances M. Eshleman, Quarryville, 2nd; Mrs. Ralph Schlosser, Elizabethtown, 3rd. Tea Tables, Miss Anna Keller, Eliza- bethtown, 1st; Miss Mary Shank, Ro- wenna, 2nd. Special Occasions, Wedding; Mrs. Robert Forney, Elizabethtown, Ist. SECTION F Horticultural Novelties. Class 1: Corsage bouquets; Miss Mary Shank, 1st; Miss Mary Stebgen, Marietta, 2nd. Class 2; Gift Arrangement; Miss Virginia Heichelroth, Bainbridge, 1st; PAYMENTS LAGGING | of our flag. "all national colors, and has pointed th | | | | where seed officials are powerless to reach him. i Recently the State seed labora- tory examined a sample of ‘bootleg’ | soy bean seed and found it con- A farmer buying this seed would | sow from 15,000 to 20,000 weed seeds to the acre. Both State and Federal agricul- | Less than a year after the Liberty Bell rang Stripes became the official flag of our country on June 14, 1777. PAGE THRER SUN NEVER SETS ON OLD GLORY REVERED BY NATION SINCE 1777 to celebrate the Declaration of Independence, the Stars and The anniversary is now observed as Flag Day. out | At Right: U. S. Marines on parade with the National Flag and their regimental colors, way to freedom for countless thous- ands. fidelity to the ideals of America. 155 years it has been | breeze, our country. | Woodrow Wilson which we honor and under which we serve, is the emblem of our unity, our power, our thought and purpose as a nation. that which we give it from generation survey and all | to generation. merchantile establishments have been | On We Americans may well be proud, a blue field, representing a new con- “The choices : _ | majestic silence above the hosts that Payment of dance hall licenses this | execute those year will be stressed, Mr. Smith In- | peace or in war. And yet, though si- dicated. Licenses for the operation of | lent, it speaks to us—speaks to us of dance halls in the county became due | the past, of the men and women who on June 1, Mr Smith announced. Rep- | went before us, they wrote upon it.” | Congress decided “that the flag of the | thirteen United States stripes, alternate red and white; that the union be thirteen stars, white in terval varying only when daylight sav- ing is in vogue, About two and a half hours later the ceremony is repeated in the Hawaiian Islands. More than five hours have | rolled around before the flag is raised by the Soldiers of the Sea in the far= the nation. It has kept pace with the off Philippines, and at virtually the march of events that followed the |Same hour in Shanghai, China, the Revolution, and has braved the battle | Marines of the Fourth Regiment hoist | the flag above their regimental head- and the breeze during more than a quarters. century and a half of national growth. : Several hours later the westward Its influence has gradually extended tt Tai the dlobe. and i march of daylight catches the flutter- aroun e globe, and In our genera- |, g 14s of the Stars and Stripes fly- tion the sun never sets on the Stars]. Bs : ifr : : ing over American Consulates in the and Stripes. Every minute of the |= > : twenty four 1 | Near East or in Europe, and when the | a boii re hi oa | sun has passed its zenith in the Old {Panel ne fois © ory ant L¥=| world, the flag is again flung to the ing in the breeze. breeze on the Atlantic seaboard. | It is the custom of the U. S. Marines | Thus the Stars and Stripes makes its to raise the flag every morning at| appearance in the early morning in all eight o'clock. It remains flying until | parts of the globe, and remains flying unset he h sunse | 3 ic a1 . | until the sun disappears over the ho- | Three hours after the U.S. Marines at | rizon. New York, Boston, Norfolk and other | Our flag has never been a symbol of | East Coast naval stations have raised | military aggression. At home or the flag, the Marines at posts along the | abroad, afloat on the seven seas, or in | Pacific seaboard present arms to the | some far distant outpost, it is Amer=- | colors as they are hauled martly to|ica’s guarantee of justice to those who | the top of the flagstaffi—the time in-'seek protection under its folds. It is the most beautiful of | stellation.” In the intervening years it oc! has remained unchanged, save only for | an occasional variation in the number of stripes and the addition of a star | for each new state. The story of the flag is the story of It stands for patriotism, loyalty For waving in the the most-beloved symbol of “The flag, said: It has no other character than are ours. It floats in choices, whether in and of the records | June 14, 1777, the Continental be thirteen BY 3 + o oy \/ 09% 0, 0. 0 05004 7 * 0, 0. 0 0 0 ew 20450450 03070030 504} CORR IR a? 0400.9, \/ ho? % 7 D0 0, 0. 0, 0. 0 0 Xa ho? Sod 000,00 00, 9, AXE RE acer 9, hos 0 a0 oO $0000 00300304} * 9 * B. F. Hoffman. Miss Alice Heisey, Elizabethtown, 2nd; SECTION C Mrs. Benjamin Heichelroth, 3rd; Mrs. Floral Arrangement and color har-| Samuel Frey, Marietta, honorable mony: mention. Class I, Basket arrangement: (a)| Bird Houses: | | Cass 1, 8 to 13 years; Paul Brandt, Bainbridge, 1st; Gordon Geistweite, | Bainbridge, 2nd; Joseph Groff, Eliza- | bethtown, 3rd, Robert Forney, Eliza- | bethtown, 4th. 14 years to 16 years. Jay Musser, Elizabethtown, 1st; Ralph Oberholtzer, Mt; Joy, 2nd; Les- | lie Hixson, Bainbridge, 3rd; Robert | i Mount Joy, 3rd. i Landis, Elizabethtown, 4th, *, | & & S$ & & +e ¥ 90 0% 00 0% 0, 0. 0. 0. 9. 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 00 0 0 0 0 0 %e%e% 2% 2% 2% 2% e% ($040 090.0 GP 0G O40 0 0 S00 EDC G00 00000 CID OOP CI 00 00 0009059 000 69000 0% % 4 6° 90 0% a0 oF. 0 bP 0a" 90 00 00 00 * The Worlds At Your Door 90 0% o% o%% 0 0. 0 ala 00% 0? 0? 040 0,00, > * CR) IMMORTALIZED in story and song, the old “corner store” has passed—along with the free potato on the kerosene can, and the customers’ access to the crack- er-box. It was picturesque, but you never quite knew what you would find there. Half the time it was full of people who didn’t know what they wanted. The other half, it was empty. It was more of a club than a store. * J 838380 Oo 0% 00% 0. 0. 0. 0 0 ENGR NG Xa Ng X Ot, Today, when you enter your grocery store—or any store—you know what you want, how much you want of it, and the price you are going to pay. Advertising has rendered you this service. It brings you weekly through the columns of The Bulletin, the merchan- dising opportunities of this community. In the quiet of your own home, you are enabled to select every- thing you want to buy! 9, & J A > ® a 0 0 Ob 6 6 6 OO ENG XG Kg Ng X The modern way to be certain of quality and value is to read the advertisements. Representing almost every field of opportunity, the advertising columns of The Bulletin bring vou the fascinating story of the whole world’s market-place! Ob. 6. 5, 9b 9 VP 0 Read the advertisements! They are weekly mes- sages of opportunity for you. 0. 0 4 ho” 9% 2 a Xa XS 9. 0. 0 lo” % >. 0. 0 a” Po? 9% 0% CO JOR) y? 9% X 9, > 9, J * 3 3 * | ddr fr dr BB PB BPP de